Reported by Kristin
Nevermore began our weekly Zoom meeting with The Island
by Ragnar Jonasson, the second in the Inspector Hulda Hermannsdottir series
after The Darkness. Jonasson did not disappoint, as a group of four
friends go to a remote Icelandic island for a weekend, but only three of them
come back. Our reader was especially impressed by the stellar descriptions of
the countryside, and found the writing thrilling and atmospheric.
Katherine Center’s novel What You Wish For features
Samantha, a school librarian who has a history with the new school principal.
Duncan used to be an easygoing administrator, but now he has turned into a
tough guy. Our reader said that it was a very easy, light read, which was rather
mindless but very fun.
Our next reader says that every time she finishes a book she
likes to ask herself what she learned. In the case of The Dutch House by
Ann Patchett, for this particular reader, the answer was “absolutely nothing.”
Although it was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize and a New York Times
bestseller, this epic story set over five decades simply did not speak to her.
About the Conroy family who built a real estate empire after World War II, the
characters go from poverty to wealth and back again over the generations. Our
reader felt that the people were shallow and selfish, and she moved on to her
next book.
In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an
American Family in Hitler’s Berlin by Erik Larson tells the story
of William Dodd, American ambassador to Germany in the early 1930s. Dodd brings
his wife and children along to his post, and his daughter Martha is all too
enthralled with the charming young men of the Nazi party. Hitler kept taking
more and more liberties in his reach for power, and over time established a
precedent that this was acceptable. Our reader highly recommended this as a
snapshot of history, and as a cautionary tale in today’s politics.
Several book club members have been reading the Cole Trilogy by Noah Gordon, starting
with the first book, The Physician. Set in the 11th century,
an orphan boy is sold as a slave, but ends up apprenticed to a barber-surgeon.
The boy wants to be a healer, and eventually makes his way into a Persian
medical school. Our reader said that she is loving Gordon’s incredible writing
voice, and that she can see, smell, touch, and viscerally sense everything that
is happening in the series.
Another reader picked up Blackbird House by Alice
Hoffman, a beautiful novel that follows the families who live in a farmhouse on
Cape Cod over two centuries. Full of relationships, the stories told are
somehow mystical, with symbolic white blackbirds appearing throughout the book.
Our reader enjoyed it very much, and recommended it to others.
Finally, Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail
Honeyman came back to the virtual table. As our reader commented, obviously,
she is not fine. Eleanor is a young woman working in an office, and from her
lack of social skills and self-isolation, it soon becomes very apparent that
her mother’s cruel treatment stunted her emotionally. An arc of events forces
Eleanor to interact more with her community, although she goes kicking and
screaming (metaphorically) all the way. Our reader called this a lovely book,
and said that Eleanor puts such care into making such bad decisions and she
(the reader) relates to that.
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